The farm was a world of unrelenting labor. Lucía woke before dawn, her hands unaccustomed to toil. She fed the chickens, cleaned the stables, carried buckets of water, and worked the fields under the relentless sun. Her hands blistered, her back ached, and her legs shook—but she never complained. Exhaustion became her companion, yet there was a strange sense of accomplishment each night as she collapsed into the small bed, knowing she had survived another day.
Carmen remained distant but fair. She was neither cruel nor comforting—she was a test, a force that demanded resilience. Her words were sparse, her gaze direct, and she allowed no room for weakness. Lucía began to understand that survival here meant embracing discomfort, learning to bend without breaking.
One afternoon, while picking vegetables under the oppressive sun, Carmen spoke more than usual.
—Your mother was like that too, she said suddenly.
Lucía looked up, startled. —As well as…?
—Stubborn. She never knew how to give up.
Lucía felt something stir deep within her—not just because of the child in her belly, but because of a connection to a family she had never known. —I didn’t know that…
Carmen’s eyes softened imperceptibly. —There are many things you don’t know.
And so, amid labor, silence, and small revelations, a fragile bond began to form. Little by little, Carmen shared pieces of her past: the long years of widowhood, the difficulties she faced, and the quiet determination that had carried her through. Lucía listened, absorbing every word as if it were a missing piece of her own life.
The farm, though worn and neglected, began to reveal its potential. Lucía noticed the richness of the soil, the possibilities in the neglected fields, and the resilience in every old fence and creaking door.
—We could sell more than eggs, she suggested one day. Vegetables… maybe jams.
Carmen studied her skeptically. —That requires work.
—We are already working on it, Lucía said with a small smile.
Eventually, Carmen relented, and together they began repairing fences, planting new seeds, and clearing fields. Slowly, they began selling at the village market. At first, no one trusted the newcomers, but the quality of their produce spoke for itself.
Weeks passed. Lucía’s belly grew alongside her determination. She was no longer the frightened woman who had arrived in the rain. She was strong, capable, and beginning to see the farm as her home.
One evening, while resting after a long day, Carmen finally spoke words Lucía would carry forever:
—You didn’t come here to hide. You came to start over.
Lucía gazed at the horizon, the sun painting the fields in gold. —I think so, she whispered.
For illustration purposes only
Chapter 2: Hard Days and Silent Lessons
The next morning, Lucía awoke to the sound of roosters crowing and the first gray light of dawn filtering through the small, grimy window. Her body ached in places she hadn’t known could ache, and the early contractions reminded her that she was carrying more than just hope—she was carrying life. But there was no time to linger.
Carmen’s voice came from the kitchen, low but commanding:
—Get up. The chickens won’t feed themselves.
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